We found a wood cook stove that needed a few minor repairs while scrounging at a local scrap yard. I formed a new hot water coil for the stove, but have not plumbed it up yet. By the way, the stove heats our old farmhouse very well. Disclaimer: where we live even the federal renewable energy department says we are so overcast that we would have to downrate solar panels to 30%, so solar has not been much of an option. However, with our wet summers, our hardwood forests grow like weeds. I want to wire a hot water circulation pump to this heating coil, and some snap disk temperature sensors to both the exit of the stove’s heating coil and our domestic water heater. The plan is if the stove's water is above 120 f the pump turns on and sends water to the propane water heater and back. If the water heater gets too hot {160 f ?} a solenoid valve shuts the flow to the water heater and opens a valve to hot water baseboard heaters in my shop as a waste heat dump.
Any thoughts, temperature suggestions, or ideas?